нan ѕolo (
scruffier) wrote in
garbageship2016-02-17 07:46 am
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That's no moon... Wait, no, it's a moon.

In which Our Heroes (?) stop for blaster practice, assuming the kids can stop bothering each other for two minutes, so help me, I will turn this light freighter around and we will not get ice cream.
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He nods decisively. "Yes."
This time, his jog is much closer to an actual run. Things are getting real.
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Maybe he'd have rebelled and moved to Tatooine to take up moisture farming. Who knows.
The rock goes sailing and Han stops short, breathing heavy but not losing sight of it.
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He could have always become obsessed with Anakin's early life and developed a love of racing. Slightly more exciting than moisture farming.
Ben keeps both hands on the blaster and shoots twice. Both miss, of course, but he was tracking it well and likely would have hit something if it had been person-sized. Even though he's clearly not pleased with his performance, he seems to be accepting that this is a thing he can't master in an hour.
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"If that was bigger--" he says, the approving tone and nod ought to finish it. "How do you feel?"
Like he's learning? Tired of running?
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"Like I wouldn't win in a fair blaster fight." This comes out as a statement of fact rather than an irritated pout. "Will you throw another?"
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He nods, takes in a deep breath. "Keep running. But slow down a little."
It's going well enough that he thinks he can keep pace and toss a few, one at a time. The movement's more important than the speed, and he doesn't want to be too far from the ship. Plus he hasn't got the stamina he used to, but he'd rather not admit to that part.
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Except now, apparently. Running from the First Order, running from Snoke. There are other things he's running from, too, but they aren't physical threats and he refuses to acknowledge that they even exist.
He nods and doesn't even make a snide comment about the old man looking tired. Shooting rocks is the most serious of business and serious business leaves no room for being snide. He takes off at a slower pace, determined to succeed at this exercise before stopping.
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Taking a sharp breath, he chases after, tossing one stone after another, hanging back just a little. It's hard to keep much of an eye on the proceedings when he's watching where he's going, but he trusts Ben to gauge his own success.
Running's not so bad.
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By the time Ben decides that he's done with this exercise, he has only managed to nick one rock. Most shots were close, though, and he's fairly confident in his ability to at least look like he knows what he's doing with a blaster. He stops, a little out of breath, and looks back at his father.
"That's enough." He runs a hand through his disheveled hair and lets the blaster hang at his side. "I won't master this today."
At least he can admit it.
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"You won't," he agrees. Han is more worn-down by the exertion, and he stoops a little, obviously breathing hard. He's not a young man, sometimes it's all too obvious. "But for a man who's never had to shoot that's not bad."
Mild praise, maybe, but there's a lot of genuine pride to back it up.
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Not that bad is going to have to be good enough, as much as it displeases him to be mediocre at something that he's making an attempt at. He gives his father a curious look and tilts his head. "Were you going to keep throwing rocks until you dropped?"
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"I'm fine," he says gruffly. Admitting to his own weaknesses is not Han's favorite thing in the world. And really, he's out of breath but not that badly off.
(Worse, though, than he wants to say. There's a twinge in his side that seems new, until he realizes it's probably the rib he broke back on that job with Kitty.)
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"You're old." Not a cruel reply, but a blunt one. That isn't all of it, though; he's become very good at picking up weaknesses, with and without the force. "What else is it?"
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"You got it. I'm old." What did you think would happen over fifteen years, Ben? It's not only children that change. It's not like that's the only injury he's gotten in the course of a rather rough life... Just more recent than most.
"Just have to catch my breath."
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But he's gotten old. So has Ben. Even if you try, you can't always imagine it.
"Happens to the best of us," he murmurs. There's not much humor to the joke. He doesn't just mean growing old.
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He sets his blaster down, still looking at his father. "What else changed?" He doesn't just mean growing old, either.
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"What do you want to know?"
He doesn't know where to begin.
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"What happened to you?" It's a vague question. How did his parents react to losing Ben Solo? Leia implied that Han had made himself scarce; what was he doing in all of that time?
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It sounds like an accusation. He doesn't mean it as one, but it sounds like it. He shakes his head, slightly.
"We tried to track you down a while." He shrugs. "Spent longer and longer away, and when I came home..."
It had been different. Difficult. He never felt like he could get his feet under him, and there was little to talk about with Leia but their loss. Their grief; they blamed themselves so much they could hardly look at each other. It felt like that, anyway.
"So we went back to what we were good at. Few years back Ducain stole the Falcon, been looking for it since."
It all sounds so simple and neat, laid out like that. He's not sure he wants to put all the weight of their heartbreak on Ben.
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His father's grief in the present is undeniable and heavy. His mother's had been, as well. He's coming to accept that his actions had very real effects on them—something that he knew at some level, but rejected to keep the narrative he'd created for his early life intact. They loved him and they mourned him. They hadn't wanted him to go.
He's been lying to himself for a long time.
"You and Chewbacca went back to smuggling." Leia went back to fighting in the arena in which she was the most at home and Luke disappeared. He broke the entire family. "If you had found me, you wouldn't have liked what you found."
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"Maybe we shouldn't have."
He's thought it. Leia said as much, but it's different, saying it aloud himself. At the time he'd thought it, on and off, but Ben was so torn; it was too much for a boy, for anyone, to handle. Maybe he should've fought harder, but he didn't know what else to suggest.
"It was the hardest thing we ever did. If we hadn't thought it would help--"
And it was Luke, it wasn't as though they sent him off to some stranger. Luke had loved Ben as much as they did. There weren't better hands he could be in, they'd thought.
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Han regrets sending him away. He isn't lying, and his sincerity continues to challenge what Ben thought was true, just as it has since they reentered each other's lives.
"I don't remember hesitation on your part." Hadn't they been relieved to send him to Luke? He was a threat. They saw his affinity for the dark side. "I remember you being afraid of what I would do if I wasn't controlled."
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By now he's got his breath back. He takes a step closer, just because this doesn't feel like the kind of conversation that wants distance.
"Do you remember what it was like before you left? Bad dreams most nights, you couldn't walk by kids fighting without getting worked up yourself. Damn right we were afraid. Of what it'd do to you, if you couldn't get a handle on it."
It had been too much for anyone. Far too much for a child.
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Kylo Ren wouldn't have been able to do it. His hatred towards Luke hadn't been kindled as carefully as the hate he had for his father.
"I remember." He doesn't move closer even though there's a draw to do so. His father had been more patient than anyone might believe possible, especially where the nightmares were concerned. Those things are still true—bad dreams, getting worked up right along with others. More controlled, but still there and with no one to calm him down.
A lot of the things that he thinks he remembers don't support each other. It's not enough to be torn between the light side and the dark side anymore, apparently. Now his memories are going to unravel, too.
That makes him move. He steps closer and reaches out to put a hand on Han's shoulder, actively seeking that connection.
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